From aesthetics to science, from form to naturesculptors Matteo Peducci and Mattia Savini achieve an innovative effect in art using geopolymer materials. The marble, a material which characterizes classical sculpture, encompasses a symbolic journey which demands to be followed in order to tell a new story of contemporary art.

Investigating the relationship between time and memory, Alessandro Tofanelli creates metaphysical landscape in the form of traditional oil painting. Combining memories of forgotten places in Tuscany and his poetic imagination, Tofanelli uses fine brush strokes to create his intricate landscapes and waterscapes that combine both architecture and nature.

With a major in visual arts and scenography, Andrea Mariconti’s work is about exploration of raw materials made up of conceptual properties, that emulate nature and organic forms. With a wide range of experiences within the social health sector, Mariconti’s work has since won awards worldwide for his expressive artworks and their transmutation.

German hyperrealistic illustrator and artist, David Uessem focuses on figurative styles and portraiture covered in colourful shining liquids. Recognised for his large-scale, photo-realistic and meticulously detailed paintings, Uessem masters the technique in bringing the contrast between illusion and reality. His work has been included in many individual and collective exhibitions in Germany and across Europe.

With distinctive texture and a delicate pastel colour palette, David Puma portrays a powerful narrative throughout his works, bringing poetry and beauty as regenerating elements. Puma’s subject’s are diverse, from still-life’s to mythological creatures, which are executed by the vibration of his strokes and a personal vision of nature.

Using the ’lost wax’ method, Gianfranco Meggiato creates rotational bronze sculptures that are preoccupied with void rather than surface. Internationally renowned for his monumental sculptures, Meggiato’s creations represent the nucleus of life surrounded by space and intangible energy.

Internationally acclaimed artist, Guillermo Muñoz Vera, demonstrates his technical precision throughout his series of still-life oil paintings. Focusing on the natural wonders of his native Chile, his style is influenced by traditional Spanish realist painting, paired with a delicate use of light and shadows.

Ignacio addresses the potential of painting as a material. His artworks present the painting from its tactile, sensory and virtual dimension; where the dialogue between the painting, the frame and the canvas is direct, suppressing the formal obligations in that relation.

Exploring the theme of childhood, memory, and time, Isabelle Cornière’s work is an extension of her research, reflections and poetry. As a meditative investigation on human nature, Cornière creates her elegant sculptures out of bronze, coated with timeless white chalk that is then hand painted, and often paired with delicate glass accessories.

Developing a unique glass-fusing mosaic technique, Isabelle Scheltjens achieves striking optical effects by capturing the dance of light and colour within her creations. The colourful pieces of glass act as dots of paint used by the pointillists: forming an abstract image up close, yet a dramatic and precise portrait from a distance.

Huszti portrays his models with utmost consequence and creatively precise, and thus reveals the personality of each of his models. Various aspects such as beauty. Sensuality, coolness, distance and aloofness as well as mysteriousness are well reflected in the individual works.

The crumpled fabric reminds that life is a theatre, when the curtain opens the magic operates, full of mirages and illusions. Donadini considers to be in constant exploration, for the materials, the projects.

There is a terrible truth in any victory, but this was far from being a hollow one. It’s not the job of the satirist to be charitable, more to distort a situation into something digestible and realistic. A cartoon feels the suffering of its subject matter even when that subject has been exposed as something of a hoaxer or had the impudence to make a misjudgment on a catastrophic scale, which is much the same thing.

Palacios' artistic creations revolve around the concept of the range of human emotions, through his powerful techniques and abstract brushstrokes. This technique of using broken walls as his surface, creates an extra dimension in his work that blends reality with dreamlike worlds.

Steering away from the traditional, Luca Bellandi uses the contrast of light and dark as his primary source of direction. Bellandi's works are imposing, and often painted on black and off-white backgrounds, demonstrating his cohesive subjects that play with the concepts of fashion.

With a fascination for the human form and identity, Marco Grassi creates intense portrait paintings consisting of vibrant colours that challenge the boundaries of pop art. Grassi’s work is composed of pigments directly applied to the canvas with a palette knife, defining texture and character through this layering process, and often adorned with his signature gold leaf technique.